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Michael FerrariNew tools and techniques for applying climate dataA workshop shows early signs of climate scientists and data scientists coming together.
Climate cycles, machine learning and improved models were all part of the discussions at the first New York Academy of Sciences Workshop on Climate Informatics.
Interest in renewable energy could benefit data servicesThe need for temperature, wind, and solar analytics will likely increase.
The increase of large-scale infrastructure investments in the alternative energy sector will likely be accompanied by demand for data-driven services that can optimize efficiency of the related operational costs.
The ecology of riskFinancial stability can benefit from approaches grounded in the natural sciences.
Large-scale events that have disrupted supply chains underscore the importance of viewing the world through a spatial lens.
Industrial ecology and big dataHow can massive environmental datastreams create new markets?
Because companies are tracking their inputs and byproducts carefully, there has been an exponential increase in the amout of efficiency/environmental data available for primary stakeholders and investors.
La Nina and global commoditiesThe connection between the La Nina phenomenon and food prices.
In the weather and climate community, 2010 will be remembered as a year where the strong La Nina pattern exerted a significant influence on global agricultural production.
Using the Standard Precipitation Index to monitor flood damageThe SPI can provide users with a quick and reliable way to assess damage from weather extremes
There is no shortage of news that attempts to discuss the potential for disruptions to the global food supply chain, as well as the subsequent financial and social effects of such disruptions on a global scale. Most of the news which garners the headlines in the agricultural commodity sector deals with topics including low physical inventories, floods, drought, food inflation,...
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